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Sri Lanka crisis: $3bn IMF bailout for struggling economy

leonidas_alexandar

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https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022/3/29/sri-lanka-economic-crisis-moonlight-prices-soar

I am not sure if any of the PP'ers are from Sri Lanka. Reading some absolutely scary things like hospitals running out of life saving drugs because suppliers had not been paid for over 6 months.

Any news on the actual ground situation in Sri Lanka? I gather that China and India are trying to assist but Sri Lanka is still a long way from stability.
 
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Sri Lanka cancels school exams over paper shortage as financial crisis bites

Sri Lanka has cancelled school exams for millions of students after running out of printing paper, as the country contends with its worst financial crisis since independence in 1948.

Education authorities said on Saturday the term tests, scheduled a week from Monday, were postponed indefinitely due to an acute paper shortage, with Colombo short on funds to finance imports.

“School principals cannot hold the tests as printers are unable to secure foreign exchange to import necessary paper and ink,” the Department of Education of the Western Province said.

Sri Lanka's main opposition activists hold torches during a demonstration to denounce the shortage of cooking gas, kerosene oil and a few other commodities as the country faces a major foreign exchange crisis

Official sources said the problem could hold up tests for around two thirds of the country’s 4.5 million students.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/mar/20/sri-lanka-cancels-school-exams-over-paper-shortage-as-financial-crisis-bites
 
Sri Lanka now owes $15bn in foreign bond repayments, with $7bn owed this year and a $1bn repayment required as soon as June, all to be paid in dollars. But with Sri Lanka’s foreign reserves at their lowest levels in years, and the country’s economic rating in the gutter, there are barely any dollars left and many fear the country is headed for a default.
 
A mirror into the near future for Pakistan for being on the CPEC train.

Actually it’s not the same , Lanka refused IMF loans because they wanted independent loans without the IMF dictating on policies or measures.

Pakistan is already taking IMF loans, IMF will make Pakistan adhere to its new policies and implement them.

IMF’s conditions are what works well for the country.
 
Explained: Sri Lanka economic crisis and India's $2.5 billion line of credit
Sri Lanka economic crisis: India has lent over $2.5 billion in credit so far, in addition to $500 million for a shipment of diesel.

Sri Lanka faces its worst economic crisis in decades. The Mahinda Rajapaksa government is struggling to pay for essential imports after a 70 per cent drop in foreign exchange reserves over two years triggered a currency devaluation. Fuel is in short supply, prices of food and essential goods have increased and protests have broken out as the government preps for talks with the International Monetary Fund amid concerns over its ability to pay $4 billion in foreign debts this year, including a $1 billion international sovereign bond that matures in July.

Reuters estimates Sri Lanka has only $2.31 billion left in reserves.

The IMF has indicated it stands ready to help. The Sri Lanka government is due to hold talks in April but the global financial body has sounded a warning note. A report released Friday said the island nation faces 'solvency' issues due to risks from unsustainable debt levels.

Sri Lanka received $787 million in pandemic support from the IMF in August.

Sources told Reuters Sri Lanka finance minister Basil Rajapaksa will also meet with World Bank officials next month to seek support from the United States-headquartered agency.

What happened to the Sri Lankan economy?


The crisis is widely seen as a result of mismanagement of government finances and ill-timed tax cuts, in addition to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The war in Ukraine hasn't helped either; fuel costs surged 40 per cent in a week.

Essentially Sri Lanka is deeply in debt - by some estimates it owes around 119 per cent of its GDP, which means it has borrowed more money than it can produce via goods and services.

Who are Sri Lanka's creditors?

Primary creditors include China and the Asian Development Bank. 36 .4 per cent of Sri Lanka's debt is in international sovereign bonds, with the ADB (14.6 per cent), Japan (10.9 per cent) and China (10.8 per cent) next on the list.

India has already extended a $1 billion line of credit to help Sri Lanka buy fuel, food and medicine. This week Colombo sought an additional $1.5 billion, the governor of that country's central bank told Reuters.

In addition, $500 million credit has been extended for a shipment of 40,000 tonnes of diesel to tide over the severe fuel shortage in that country.

India has also extended a $400 million currency swap and deferred payment of $515.2 million to the Asian Clearing Union (ACU) by two months.

China has lent billions - as part of its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) - over the past decade for infrastructure projects like ports and a coal power plant.

Sri Lanka has asked China to restructure debt repayments of about $3.5 billion.

How bad is it?

Bad enough that people are now fleeing Sri Lanka and trying to enter India.

Last week 16 Sri Lankans, including eight children, boarded illegal ferries to India. They were intercepted by the Coast Guard off the Tamil Nadu coast. The state is caring for them but they will almost certainly not be the last refugees.

Reports by Reuters reveal heart-breaking stories from Sri Lanka's less privileged classes, many of whom are now forced to take a second job just to survive.

"We can't survive here anymore," Indika Perera, 43, a security guard at a private company in Colombo, said. Perera now spends over half his salary on groceries for his family but still can't get more than rice once a day for his three children.

The crisis has spawned long queues outside fuel stations - which are now being guarded by soldiers to prevent a riot-like situation.

School exams have been cancelled because of the lack of paper.

On Tuesday, India's foreign minister, S Jaishankar, had to step in to help a Sri Lankan hospital that has suspended surgeries due to lack of medical facilities.


How much worse can it get?

Since November, ratings agencies like Moody's, Fitch and Standard & Poor's have all downgraded Sri Lanka on debt default worries.

Fitch estimates Sri Lanka will also need to arrange for $2.4 billion to help state-owned and private firms in the country honour 2022 debt obligations; these will be over and above the $4.5 billion central government debt.

The country also needs around $20 billion for essential imports such as fuel, food and intermediate goods for exports.

What do experts say?

Some experts believe Sri Lanka should establish a three-year repayment structure. Doing so would lessen the burden on Sri Lankan citizens .

"Sri Lanka is unreasonably committed to repaying its debt. It is more prudent to press pause on debt repayment and take care of critical economic needs," Verité Research Executive Director and Economist Dr Nishan de Mel told Reuters.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/world-news/explained-sri-lanka-economic-crisis-101648545840320.html
 
My Tamil friends from Sri lanaka are actually enjoying this and finding the reaction from the Sinhalese majority amusing. They all send money back to relatives back home so they aren't feeling it much. Most of them are used to this during war. My sinhalese colleague thinks this is the worst thing to ever happened.
 
Actually it’s not the same , Lanka refused IMF loans because they wanted independent loans without the IMF dictating on policies or measures.

Pakistan is already taking IMF loans, IMF will make Pakistan adhere to its new policies and implement them.

IMF’s conditions are what works well for the country.

Isn’t that the whole debate now in Pakistan of ignoring the old status quo of the west like FATF, IMF etc?
 
Not another refugee crisis in India.

3bn usd already provided. Talks going on for more.
 
Not another refugee crisis in India.

3bn usd already provided. Talks going on for more.

If Sinhala refugees start coming in that may be a new set of problems because of the hatred Tamils have towards them. At least the politicians will make it an issue. Not a good thing.
 
Actually it’s not the same , Lanka refused IMF loans because they wanted independent loans without the IMF dictating on policies or measures.

Pakistan is already taking IMF loans, IMF will make Pakistan adhere to its new policies and implement them.

IMF’s conditions are what works well for the country.

SL refused IMF because that would expose the Rajapaksa family literally selling SL to China in the name of investment.
 
If Sinhala refugees start coming in that may be a new set of problems because of the hatred Tamils have towards them. At least the politicians will make it an issue. Not a good thing.

No way Tamils will accept Sinhala refugees.
 
Why should the world care about Sri Lanka, when there are other important matters like Ukraine?

MSM says hi.
 
No way Tamils will accept Sinhala refugees.
They will simply go and settle in Kerala. It is culturally much more like Sri Lanka than TN and the communists there will always open their arms to a potential new vote bank.
 
They will simply go and settle in Kerala. It is culturally much more like Sri Lanka than TN and the communists there will always open their arms to a potential new vote bank.
Kerala Economic model is similar to Sri Lanka.
Costal , Agro, Tourism and Foreign Remittances is crucial.
Industrial, pharma, IT development isn't high.
Only difference is Kerala is part of India and no Chinese Loans.
 
Kerala Economic model is similar to Sri Lanka.
Costal , Agro, Tourism and Foreign Remittances is crucial.
Industrial, pharma, IT development isn't high.
Only difference is Kerala is part of India and no Chinese Loans.

Yes true, but us Keralites are proud to hold the record for the highest recruitment for ISIS from India...
 
The Sri Lankan rupee has fallen from Rs 200 to Rs 285 per dollar in a single day

Yikes, also Sri Lankans think, they can always go begging for money to pay off the Chinese loans which they can never pay off. Chinese seem quite happy with this setup, China gets to control all strategic areas of Sri Lanka and have India pay off the money which is owed by Sri Lanka.

Now that's a great way of doing business.... Even Jews would envy this...
 
Kerala Economic model is similar to Sri Lanka.
Costal , Agro, Tourism and Foreign Remittances is crucial.
Industrial, pharma, IT development isn't high.
Only difference is Kerala is part of India and no Chinese Loans.

Another difference is the GTB (Go to Bangalore) and GTG (Go to Gelf) model that Kerala promotes for jobs, education and medicine that is key to the HDI stats of the state.
 
<b>Late-Night Protest By Thousands Near Lanka President Home, Cops' Bus Burnt</b>

<I>Sri Lanka: By evening today, the people started converging on the road near the house of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa in Colombo, demanding that he intervene in the situation.</I>

Colombo:
People in Sri Lankan capital Colombo, suffering for weeks under a terrible economic crisis, erupted in protest late this evening.

More than 5,000 people held a protest march in the Lankan capital near the President's house demanding that he step down, and clashed with the police.

The paramilitary police unit, a Special Task Force, had to be called in to quell the protests.

There has been a critical shortage of food and essential items, fuel and gas for weeks as the country grapples with the worst economic downturn since its independence.

This evening, diesel was no longer available, leaving the country's 22 million people under a 13-hour power blackout and keeping transport off the roads.

The blackout had spin-off effect on state-run hospitals which already had stopped surgeries due to shortage of medicines.

The electricity rationing hit mobile phone base stations and affected the quality of calls.

The Colombo Stock Exchange had to limit trading by half to two hours, and offices asked non-essential staff to stay home.

Street lights were being turned off to save electricity, news agency Reuters reported, quoting a minister.

By evening today, the people started converging on the road near the house of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, demanding that he and his family "Go home".

The President's elder brother Mahinda Rajapaksa serves as prime minister while the youngest, Basil Rajapaksa, holds the finance portfolio.

The eldest brother Chamal Rajapaksa is agriculture minister while nephew Namal Rajapaksa holds the cabinet post for sports.

The trouble started when the police attempted to disperse the protesters, who were waving posters and shouting slogans.

The mob threw bottles and stones at the police and the crowd could be controlled only with tear gas and water cannons.

Visuals from the spot showed the mob encircling two policemen on bikes.

The slogan shouting was punctuated by sounds of shattering glass and crashing stones.

A police bus was set on fire.

Mr Rajapaksa was not at home during the protests, reported Agence France-Presse quoting official sources.

Nandakumar, the Deputy Inspector General of Colombo, said the mob was "not unruly".

"It is fine... nothing to worry," he told NDTV.

Asked how they plan to disperse the crowd, he said, "We cannot say anything to them now".

Since yesterday, local television channels and NDTV have reported protests erupting in various parts of the country.

In several towns, motorists blocked main roads.

The current crisis has its roots in the Lankan government's move to ban imports back in March 2020.

The move was meant to save foreign currency for the government's $51 billion debt.

But this led to a widespread shortage of essential items and skyrocketing prices.

The government has said it is seeking a bailout from the International Monetary Fund.

It has also sought loans from India and China.

https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/hun...annons-used-2855594#pfrom=home-ndtv_topscroll
 
Remarkable they have run out of diesel are going to switch off street lights!
 
When you run the country like a family corner shop, this happens.

Yeah I know ,seeing American letter stuff and Pakistan politics over last week have to come to appreciate India’s foreign policy and foreign reserves as well.

South Asia is weird right now, political instability in most places except a couple.

Astonishing how Sri Lankans waited till the end moment .. to protest.
I can see Ranatunga blaming India for this.
 
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Yeah I know ,seeing American letter stuff and Pakistan politics over last week have to come to appreciate India’s foreign policy and foreign reserves as well.

South Asia is weird right now, political instability in most places except a couple.

Astonishing how Sri Lankans waited till the end moment .. to protest.
I can see Ranatunga blaming India for this.

Nothing to appreciate. Indian foreign policy only survives because of Indians economic power. Remove that and the US will be threatening you too like they do us
 
Nothing to appreciate. Indian foreign policy only survives because of Indians economic power. Remove that and the US will be threatening you too like they do us

Hmm even during the worst economic crisis 1989-1993 for us we survived because then both the opposition and ruling party worked together.

US has consistently threatened India .. even in 1993 they tried to make it difficult in UN.

India’s economic power is from only from 2000s..
 
Nothing to appreciate. Indian foreign policy only survives because of Indians economic power. Remove that and the US will be threatening you too like they do us

And how did India improve its economic power?

USA is probably threatening because they have a certain thing called “leverage”. How did they get that leverage is a matter of self-introspection, not hurling accusations.

Also I wonder if Imran Khan’s life is under threat (I sincerely hope that is fake news) if he will be moving to the “west” (UK) or if he will work against islamophobia in Afghanistan and Syria?

Maybe then Imran and most of his supporters can criticize and abuse west sitting in the west.

The average kid in the subcontinent still wants the American dream. Study there and work there.

This open threat against USA will be counter productive. I am sure this won’t go well in this emotional time understandably but since I have no stake in this fight, as neutral of an assessment.
 
Nothing to appreciate. Indian foreign policy only survives because of Indians economic power. Remove that and the US will be threatening you too like they do us

thats true for every country.. Remove America's economic power everything else will fall. They won't be able to maintain their army, NATO, they will defaults, etc, etc..
 
thats true for every country.. Remove America's economic power everything else will fall. They won't be able to maintain their army, NATO, they will defaults, etc, etc..

Hmm even during the worst economic crisis 1989-1993 for us we survived because then both the opposition and ruling party worked together.

US has consistently threatened India .. even in 1993 they tried to make it difficult in UN.

India’s economic power is from only from 2000s..

When India was at its lowest in the 90s, it was never as low as us. Secondly when it was at its lowest Russia was a mess and India had no hard decisions to make when it came to allies. When we are our worst we have had to juggle Russia/China vs the US. India can do that right now, as its an economic powerhouse. If it wasn't the US would be making the same threats to Modi it is making to Khan.

That's why it is very important for Pakistan to become a major economic power, otherwise its suicidal showing balls to anyone when your economy can't take major blows.
 
When India was at its lowest in the 90s, it was never as low as us. Secondly when it was at its lowest Russia was a mess and India had no hard decisions to make when it came to allies. When we are our worst we have had to juggle Russia/China vs the US. India can do that right now, as its an economic powerhouse. If it wasn't the US would be making the same threats to Modi it is making to Khan.

That's why it is very important for Pakistan to become a major economic power, otherwise its suicidal showing balls to anyone when your economy can't take major blows.

In 1991when India was at its lowest point with threat of default, India had a coalition government, just like PTI govt. Hard decisions were still taken to move forward. Pak has to do same now
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">No amount of social media bans, curfews or declaring emergencies will solve the real emergency that is the suffering of the people and the economic crisis. The whole country including the majority that voted the government in is asking for a real solution. Where is it ?</p>— Kumar Sangakkara (@KumarSanga2) <a href="https://twitter.com/KumarSanga2/status/1510553866580152321?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 3, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
No way Tamils will accept Sinhala refugees.

Tamil Nadu won't accept Sinhala refugees, it will be a nightmare for them for what they did to Tamils they did there and to Tamil Nadu fishermen. The are better for running to somewhere else than Tamil Nadu.
 
Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa on Monday invited the opposition to join a unity government as protests demanding his resignation over a worsening economic crisis spread across the island. "The president invites all political parties in parliament to accept cabinet posts and join the effort to seek solutions to the national crisis," his office said in a statement.
 
Reading about the Rajapaksa family's corruption, misrule and intimidation of opponents is very reminiscent, sadly, of what we've seen in Pakistan.
 
COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s president lost his parliamentary majority on Tuesday as former allies urged his resignation following days of street protests over the island nation’s crippling economic crisis.

Unprecedented shortages of food and fuel along with record inflation and blackouts have inflicted widespread misery in the country’s most painful downturn since independence from Britain in 1948.

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s once-powerful ruling coalition is in turmoil after a string of defections, capped on Tuesday by the new finance minister’s resignation just one day after taking office.


And as anti-Rajapaksa demonstrations continued for a fifth straight day, the government warned of retaliation if rallies turned violent.

Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s once-powerful ruling coalition in turmoil after string of defections

“Security forces will not hesitate to enforce the law against those involved in violence,” defence ministry secretary Kamal Gunaratne said in a statement.

More than 60 people had been arrested in connection with unrest since Friday and many have said they were tortured in police custody.

The UN Human Rights Council said it was closely watching the deteriorating situation in Sri Lanka, which is already facing international censure over its human rights record.

“The drift towards militarisation and the weakening of institutional checks and balances in Sri Lanka have affected the state’s ability to effectively tackle the economic crisis,” the UNHRC said.

Public anger is at a fever pitch in Sri Lanka, where crowds have since the weekend attempted to storm the homes of several senior government officials.

“If we don’t act now, there will be a river of blood in the country,” said Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe, a newly independent lawmaker who broke ranks with the president’s party and joined calls for the leader to step down. “We have to forget party politics and ensure an interim government.”

Tuesday’s parliamentary session was the first since dozens of MPs withdrew their support for Rajapaksa’s government, including 16 lawmakers from his own Sri Lanka Podujana Party (SLPP).

The government is now at least five short of a majority in the 225-member house, but there has been no clear signal that legislators will attempt a no-confidence motion to topple it.

Opposition parties have already rebuffed Rajapaksa’s call to join a unity administration led by him and his elder brother, Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Their government imposed a state of emergency last week in an effort to contain street protests, but the ordinance is set to expire next week unless ratified by parliament.

Rejecting calls for a vote on the emergency decree, the government cut short Tuesday’s proceedings by two hours, but promised a debate on Wednesday.

Nimal Lanza, a former minister who has also abandoned Rajapaksa’s administration, conceded that the ruling party no longer had a mandate to govern.

“I beg and appeal to you to take the side of the protesters,” he told parliament, addressing the prime minister, who attended the session but remained silent.

Every member of Sri Lanka’s cabinet except the president and prime minister resigned late Sunday.

Former justice minister Ali Sabry was appointed as finance minister on Monday, replacing the president’s brother Basil Rajapaksa, but abruptly resigned after just one day in office.

Published in Dawn, April 6th, 2022
 
Grateful To "Big Brother" India For Help. We're grateful to the Indian government and PM Modi. : Lankan Cricket Icon Jayasuriya.

As a neighbour and a big brother of our country, India has always helped us. We're grateful to the Indian government and PM Modi.

"It is not easy for us to survive because of the current scenario. We hope to come out from this with the help of India & other countries," he said.

Colombo: Calling India a "big brother", former Sri Lankan cricketer Sanath Jayasuriya lauded the Indian government and Prime Minister Narendra Modi for sending help to the island nation as it battles the worst economic crisis since independence.
"As a neighbour and a big brother of our country, India has always helped us. We're grateful to the Indian government and PM Modi. For us, it is not easy to survive because of the current scenario. We hope to come out from this with the help of India & other countries," he said.

India has supplied over 270,000 MT fuel to Sri Lanka so far to help ease the power crisis in the island country which is witnessing acute power cuts. Sri Lanka is battling a severe economic crisis with food and fuel scarcity affecting a large number of the people in the island nation. The economy has been in a free-fall since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

"Indian credit line for fuel at work!!! One consignment each of 36,000 MT petrol and 40,000 MT diesel was delivered to Sri Lanka in the last 24 hours. Total supply of various types of fuel under Indian assistance now stands at more than 270,000 MT," the Indian embassy in Colombo tweeted.

Sri Lanka's National Eye Hospital Director expressed his gratitude to India for providing medicines as the nation facing its shortage and said that the timely help has ensured the functioning of the health facilities.

"Most of our drugs are coming from India under Indian credit line, and more supply will come to us in near future. It is a great help for us. I thank India for the support," Dr Dammika, Director of National Eye Hospital Colombo told ANI.

The Sri Lankan rupee is fast depreciating against the dollar and foreign debt is mounting. The Sri Lankan government's income has also taken a big hit due to a drop in tourism that has given rise to gas and fuel shortages, leading to massive power cuts.

As New Delhi is providing financial assistance to Colombo, India has announced another $1 billion as a credit to Sri Lanka to help shore up the sinking economy of the island nation. The $1 billion line of credit to Colombo will help in keeping their food prices and fuel costs under check.

Several hotels located in Colombo said they have suffered huge losses due to ongoing mass protests in the city. The country's tourism sector, one of the major contributors to its economy, which was slowly reviving after the COVID pandemic, has now hit hard.

Meanwhile, a group of university lecturers and professors on Wednesday held a protest demonstration against the government.

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Comments
Anti-government protests continue to take place in the island nation, demanding solutions to the current economic crisis.

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/sanath-jayasuriya-praises-big-brother-india-for-helping-sri-lanka-amid-economic-crisis-2867603
 
Arjuna Ranatunga praises India, slams Rajapaksas, shares his biggest worry - know what it is

New Delhi/Colombo: Former Sri Lankan cricketer Arjuna Ranatunga on Wednesday praised India for what it was doing to help Sri Lanka come out of its worst-ever economic crisis. He said India was like an elder brother to the people of Sri Lanka. He slammed his country's top politicians for mishandling the economy and changing the "constitution for their own benefit".
Sri Lanka is reeling under an unprecedented economic crisis triggered by shortage of foreign reserves after tourism plunged in the back of Covid. There were other reasons like slip in revenue due to tax cuts, high interest loans for unsustainable projects, and spike in imports of agricultural products.
As the forex reserves dwindled, the island country decided to cut back on imports leading to shortage of essentials. Now, the country is running short on almost all essentials like food, cooking gas, medicines and fuel - which has triggered long hours of power cuts. India has dispatched several consignments of fuel and other products to help the country come out of the crisis.
Today, Ranatunga praised New Delhi for its help to Colombo. He said: "India has been an elder brother to us. They are looking at our needs, like petrol and medicines. India has been helping us quite a lot." He also said PM Modi was very generous to give the grant to start Jaffna International Airport.

Referring to widespread protests against President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, he said he doesn't want bloodbath on the streets. "I am very scared. I don't want people to start another war, which we suffered for 30 years. Some of the politicians who are in the government are trying to show that this is created by Tamils and Muslims. By doing that, they (government) are trying to divide this country again," he said.
The former cricketer said that unfortunately, the government didn't handle Covid situation properly, were cocky and overconfident. "If President (Gotabaya Rajapaksa) thinks he can't handle it, he can step down. We are begging for money around the world. Luckily there are countries helping us out, mainly India," Ranatunga said.
He said the current government "changed the entire constitution for their own benefit". "General public is only asking for basic things in protests like milk powder, gas, rice, petrol. I don't agree with the violence happening. The country has gone into a major crisis in the last two years, they can give excuses of Covid but the world went through it," he said.

https://www.timesnownews.com/world/sri-lanka-crisis-arjuna-ranatunga-praises-india-slams-rajapaksas-shares-his-biggest-worry-know-what-its-article-90687520
 
'You Sold Everything To China': Lankan Traders To Embattled PM

Colombo: Food vendors in Sri Lanka are accusing the Rajapaksa government of selling everything to China adding that the country has nothing and it had bought everything from other countries on credit.
Prices of fruits and vegetables are skyrocketing in Sri Lanka amid economic and political crises. A fruit vendor, Farukh says, "3 to 4 months back apple was sold at ₹ 500 per kg, now it is ₹ 1000 per kg. The pear was sold at ₹ 700 per kg earlier, now it is sold at ₹ 1500 per kg. People don't have money."

He added, "Sri Lankan government sold everything to China. That is the biggest problem. Sri Lanka has no money as it has sold everything to China. It is buying everything on credit from other countries."

They expressed their dissatisfaction and anger saying that the prices are going up each day and they do not have any cash left with them. Another food vendor, Raja said, "There is no business. Gotabaya is of no good and he needs to leave."

Amid the unprecedented economic crisis in Sri Lanka, the leader of the Opposition, Sajith Premadasa has called for abolishing the Executive Presidential system.

"For nearly 20 years every leader promised to abolish the Executive Presidency but only strengthened it," Premadasa said in a strongly-worded speech in parliament on Tuesday reminding the Parliamentarians about the necessity to introduce a new electoral system. Meanwhile, newly-appointed Finance Minister Ali Sabry has resigned on Tuesday.

Sri Lanka is battling a severe economic crisis with food and fuel scarcity affecting a large number of the people in the island nation. The economy has been in a free-fall since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Sri Lanka is also facing a foreign exchange shortage, which has, incidentally, affected its capacity to import food and fuel, leading to the power cuts in the country. The shortage of essential goods forced Sri Lanka to seek assistance from friendly countries.

https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/sold-everything-to-china-sri-lankan-traders-to-embattled-pm-2864111
 
Very scary developments. Pakistan needs to watch this closely. If this can happen to a country with 3-4 times higher GDP per Capita. Pakistan has same % of borrowing from China.
 
Ranatunga praised India , man this has never happened, India must really be helping a lot.
 
Very scary developments. Pakistan needs to watch this closely. If this can happen to a country with 3-4 times higher GDP per Capita. Pakistan has same % of borrowing from China.

Their GDP per capita is better than India as well
 
Sri Lanka fuel crisis: Only God can help us now

Sri Lankans are facing fuel and food shortages, and steep price rises as the country is in the midst of its worst economic crisis in living memory.

Millions are having to endure daily power cuts and queue for hours to get basics like cooking gas and diesel.

Our South Asia Correspondent Rajini Vaidyanathan met one family in the southern city of Tangalle.

<iframe width="400" height="500" frameborder="0" src="https://www.bbc.com/news/av-embeds/61028654"></iframe>
 
Very scary developments. Pakistan needs to watch this closely. If this can happen to a country with 3-4 times higher GDP per Capita. Pakistan has same % of borrowing from China.

It's very scary especially now that we will have tried tested failures at helm trying to work together. What they are going to do is deplete the foreign reserves built by PTI to inflate the rupee and give gas subsidies so that they project an image as a party that's reducing inflation and providing pricing relief to the people in preparation for the general elections
 
Their GDP per capita is better than India as well

GDP per capita doesnt matter if you are leveraged to the hilt. SL at the end of the day is still a small island which means it cannot produce everything & will be mainly reliant on imports - and if you are buying everything on credit you will go bankrupt which is the present case. Lowering the taxes might be a populist move, but doesnt help bcoz a)you are decreasing revenue to the govt b) encouraging people to spend more - which means more goods imported & more forex lost. Plus a GDP based on tourism is not a real economy as the pandemic has shown us.
 
It's very scary especially now that we will have tried tested failures at helm trying to work together. What they are going to do is deplete the foreign reserves built by PTI to inflate the rupee and give gas subsidies so that they project an image as a party that's reducing inflation and providing pricing relief to the people in preparation for the general elections

They will run afowl of the IMF loan conditions if they do that, wont they?
 
They will run afowl of the IMF loan conditions if they do that, wont they?

IMF will happily give them more money. Beggars are not choosers and they certainly know how to beg. Especially with Uncle Sam being their guarantor
 
China surprisingly not helping out both Srilanka and Pakistan who desperately need economic bailout packages. Minnow countries cannot fool China.
 
China surprisingly not helping out both Srilanka and Pakistan who desperately need economic bailout packages. Minnow countries cannot fool China.

????

What are you blabbering on about.

We are nowhere near Sri Lanka's level who don't even have food left. As for loans 2 weeks Chinese rolled over a 4.2 billion loan. Same minnow country that is giving your chai wala jaahil nightmares that his chaddi is forever twisted :))

Another BJP lap dancer blocked
 
Foreign debts and loans taken from China have led to the worst economic crisis in Sri Lanka. The country is currently facing an acute shortage of food, fuel and all essential commodities in the country.
 
Cup of Tea 100 Rs
Milk Powder 2000 Rs/Kg
Rice 500 Rs/Kg
Chillies 700 Rs/Kg
Potato 200 Rs/Kg
Gas cylinder costs over 4000 Rs
Petrol in Sri Lanka has crossed 250 Rs
3 to 4 months back apple was sold at Rs 500 per kg, now it is Rs 1000 per kg.
The pear was sold at Rs 700 per kg earlier, now it is sold at Rs 1500 per kg.
 
????

What are you blabbering on about.

We are nowhere near Sri Lanka's level who don't even have food left. As for loans 2 weeks Chinese rolled over a 4.2 billion loan. Same minnow country that is giving your chai wala jaahil nightmares that his chaddi is forever twisted :))

Another BJP lap dancer blocked

What are you blabbering about? You may not be about Srilanka level, but you sure need economic bailout packages to stay afloat.
 
An interim government has been proposed in Sri Lanka three years before the next election to stabilise the country and restore peace amid the protests over the shortages of fuel, food and medicine.

President Rajapaksa dissolved his cabinet last week after 41 MPs walked out of the government to become independents.

The president's brother, Mahinda Rajapaksa, is currently Sri Lanka's prime minister and would be replaced in the interim government.

The Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) said the independents would speak with other political parties to reach a solution.

Udaya Gammanpila, chief of the Jathika Hela Urumaya party, said: "The main proposal is to have an all-party committee to make key decisions and the appointment of a new prime minister and limited cabinet."

He also said: "We want this before a new election. We have to reverse shortages and stabilise the economy."

Protesters in the country have demanded the country's president resign as they blame him for not managing the crisis well.

Locals in Sri Lanka have been forced to queue to buy fuel, cooking gas, food and medicine.

There have also been widespread power cuts as locals have struggled to cope with the shortages.

The nation will start talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) later this month to form a solution on its debt crisis.

The debt-ridden country has $25 bn (£19.2 bn) of foreign debt, which is due over the next five years.

The IMF has said it is very concerned about the country's economic crisis and is engaging with their finance ministry.

Sri Lanka has also reached out to India and China for help.

The SLFP'S general-secretary Dayasiri Jayasekera said: "Talks with the IMF will need a stable government capable of implementing clear policies.

"This is necessary to repair the economy and bring relief to the people."
Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, the archbishop of Colombo, told protesters: "Today the country needs a major change and a new beginning.

"We ask from every citizen of this country to come together and change this system. To get together and tell these people to leave.

"It's enough now, it's enough destroying the country, now leave and hand it over to someone who can govern this country."

President Rajapaksa has been accused of borrowing too much money to finance projects which are not returning enough profit for Sri Lanka.
 
I pray to Allah that Pakistan doesn't experience the same fate as Sri Lanka. Like them we're also hugely reliant on China.

I do think with the new government, trade relations will diversify which is what we need.
 
This is what happens when Family gets involved in ruling a country. From the Fake Gandhis to the Rajapakshes..... Rajapakshes sold out to China, heard the Fake Gandhis made secret deals with the Chinese also...
 
Colombo: Sri Lanka defaulted on its $51 billion foreign debt Tuesday as the island nation grapples with its worst economic crisis in memory and widespread protests demanding the government's resignation.
Acute food and fuel shortages, alongside long daily electricity blackouts, have brought widespread suffering to the country's 22 million people in the most painful downturn since independence in 1948.

Public anger has flared in recent weeks with crowds attempting to storm the homes of government leaders and security forces dispersing protesters with tear gas and rubber bullets.

Sri Lanka's finance ministry said the country was defaulting on all external obligations, including loans from foreign governments, ahead of an International Monetary Fund bailout.

"The government is taking the emergency measure only as a last resort in order to prevent further deterioration of the republic's financial position," a statement from the ministry said.

Creditors were free to capitalise any interest payments due to them or opt for payback in Sri Lankan rupees, the ministry added.

Sri Lanka's snowballing economic crisis began with an inability to import essential goods, after the coronavirus pandemic torpedoed vital revenue from tourism and remittances.

The government imposed a wide import ban to conserve its foreign currency reserves and use them to service the debts it has now defaulted on.

Economists say the crisis has been made worse by government mismanagement, years of accumulated borrowing and ill-advised tax cuts.

Public frustration with the government is widespread, with long queues around the island nation forming each day to buy scarce supplies of petrol, gas and kerosene for cooking stoves.

Rating downgrade

International rating agencies also downgraded Sri Lanka last year, effectively blocking the country from accessing foreign capital markets to raise new loans and meet demand for food and fuel.

Sri Lanka had sought debt relief from India and China, but both countries instead offered more credit lines to buy commodities from them.

Official figures show that China and Japan, two key bilateral sovereign creditors, hold about 10 percent each of Sri Lanka's foreign debt while India's share is under five percent.

Just under half of Sri Lanka's debt is market borrowings through international sovereign bonds and other similar instruments.

Estimates showed Sri Lanka needed $7 billion to service its debt load this year, against just $1.9 billion in reserves at the end of March.

https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/sri...s-agency-afp-2880723#pfrom=home-ndtv_bigstory
 
Sri Lanka prime minister Mahinda Rajapaksa is ready for a discussion with the ‘Occupy Galle Face’ demonstrators as the agitation enters the fifth day, his office was quoted as saying by news agency ANI. The protesters have been holding demonstrations near the office of president Gotabaya Rajapaksa, according to reports, as the country faces its worst-ever economic crisis, leading to a shortage of essentials. Sri Lanka has seen its largest-ever unrest in the last few weeks amid growing calls for resignation of the Rajapaksa brothers.

On Tuesday, Colombo said it was suspending its repayment of foreign debt, including bonds and government-to-government borrowing. The island nation was still awaiting the completion of a loan restructuring program with the International Monetary Fund, reports said.

“Sri Lanka has had an unblemished record of external debt service since independence in 1948. Recent events, however, including the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and the fallout from the hostilities in Ukraine, have so eroded Sri Lanka's fiscal position that continued normal servicing of external public debt obligations has become impossible,” the ministry of finance was quoted as saying.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/worl...resident-s-office-report-101649827483799.html
 
So what there are 13 hour power cuts..sinhala forces used to bomb Tamil areas with each poor family not being able to sleep at night
 
Colombo (AFP) – Sri Lanka's World Cup-winning cricket captain Arjuna Ranatunga and fellow ex-skipper Sanath Jayasuriya have joined street protests demanding the president step down over the country's economic crisis.

Cricket is avidly followed in the Indian Ocean island nation and the pair called on other former players to support attempts to oust President Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

The island nation is in the grip of its worst economic crisis since independence in 1948, with severe shortages of essential goods and regular blackouts causing widespread misery.

"Cricket is driven by spectators," Ranatunga said outside Rajapaksa's office in Colombo on Friday, surrounded by demonstrators who have been protesting daily for the president's removal since last week.

"Our fans are on the streets today because they no longer can bear the hardships. We must be with our fans when they need us most. Sports stars must physically join the protests."

Hours later, his fellow former captain Sanath Jayasuriya, known as "Master Blaster", climbed the barricades in front of Rajapaksa's colonial-era office and pledged solidarity.

"Your message is loud and clear," he told the tens of thousands of protesters. "I hope the authorities will listen and ensure a brighter future for all of us."

Crowds have been chanting "Gota go home, go home Gota."

The pair are the first former captains to join the street protests in person, but other stars have previously voiced their support.

Former captain Mahela Jayawardena has strongly backed the demonstrations on social media and urged Rajapaksa to go while ex-captain Kumar Sangakkara has issued more guarded statements.

Former Test player and International Cricket Council match referee, Roshan Mahanama, who has supported the anti-Rajapaksa campaign from its inception, compared the country's plight to Robert Mugabe's Zimbabwe.

"When I used to go to Zimbabwe many years ago, I saw the economic hardships people suffered there," Mahanama told AFP.

"My driver had to stand in a queue for hours to get diesel. I thought this will never happen in my country. But today we are in the same boat."

Fuel rationing
Police tightened security around Rajapaksa's office on Saturday as demonstrations demanding his resignation entered a second week.

More than a dozen trucks were seen parked near the building at the Galle Face Promenade, which is being protected by commandos and anti-riot police.

Official sources said authorities feared protest numbers could swell next week, when more marches are scheduled.

"We can expect more people to pour in. The current strength (of police) may not be sufficient," one official told AFP, asking not to be named.

"So far, the crowd is peaceful, but we can't take a chance."

Sri Lanka imposed fuel rationing on Friday in the latest effect of the crisis.

The government has urged citizens abroad to donate foreign exchange to help pay for desperately needed essentials.

It has announced a default on its entire external debt, and will open negotiations with the International Monetary Fund to seek a bailout.

AFP
 
What's going on in India's neighbourhood

Our neighbours are fighting a war on their own land. Against Covid-19 and a deteriorating economy. A look at what's going on in our padosi desh.

All's not well in India's neighbourhood. Pakistan has recently got yet another prime minister. Sri Lanka is on the verge of defaulting on its foreign debt for the first time since its independence. Nepal has suspended its central bank chief as it stares at economic uncertainty. And in China, there are concerns that new Covid-19 restrictions could unsettle its economy that just about managed to survive the pandemic's previous phases.

There is a crisis brewing in India's neighbourhood and while the factors are many, the one strand common in all countries is the economy and the Covid-19 pandemic. Here's a quick look at what's going on in some of India's neighbours as far as their economies are concerned.

PAKISTAN

Once again, a Pakistani prime minister crashed out of the office without completing the full term of five years. Imran Khan, who took over as the prime minister in 2018, came to power with a promise of creating a 'naya' (new) Pakistan. During his campaign, the swashbuckling former cricketer focussed on the anti-corruption plank and his campaign struck a chord with the masses. Imran Khan vowed to make Pakistan better with a 'naya' global image and a better economy.

Cut to March 2022. Pakistan is in the midst of neck-deep debt and high inflation with unemployment numbers hitting a record. In response, the Wazir-e-Azam said: I didn't join politics to know the prices of tomatoes and potatoes.

Less than a month later, Imran Khan faced a no-confidence motion that he lost and Pakistan got yet another prime minister -- Nawaz Sharif's brother Shehbaz Sharif. Sharif too promised to tackle tackling the economic crisis on a war footing. "After the formation of the federal cabinet, the government would come up with plans to overcome inflation and revive the economy," Sharif told the media soon after taking the oath.

The State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) last week projected deterioration in the outlook for inflation, which has remained in double digits for some time. Pakistan's central bank said the March inflation turnout was higher than expected. It said the average inflation forecast had been revised upwards to slightly above 11 per cent in FY22.

The SBP also pointed to pressure from a sharp drop in foreign currency reserves. Reserves held by the Pakistani central bank dropped by $728 million to $11.3 billion by April 1, compared to $16.2 billion on March 4. The bank said the decline was largely due to debt repayments and government payments pertaining to the settlement of an arbitration award related to a mining project.

Meanwhile, the Asian Development Bank has projected the country's GDP growth rate to be 4 per cent this year.

SRI LANKA

Just like Pakistan, India's neighbour down South is also in serious trouble. Sri Lankans are facing a shortage of basic items such as milk, rice, electricity and medicines. The crisis in the island nation has spiralled into protest and violence on the streets and mass resignations of ministers.

In late November 2019, after winning Sri Lanka's presidential election and months ahead of a parliamentary ballot that would again test his popularity, Gotabaya Rajapaksa gathered his cabinet and made good on a campaign promise to slash taxes. The move, which included a near-halving of value-added tax, blindsided some top central bank executives.

The economic argument in favour of the cuts was simple: it was needed to free up spending and boost Sri Lanka's ailing finances. However, the case against it was that reducing potential revenues when obligations were high was risky and undermined a 2019 debt management plan that hinged on a narrowing fiscal deficit.

Not long after the move, the Covid-19 pandemic struck, crippling a Lankan economy that was heavily reliant on tourism. While the pandemic-induced hit to Sri Lanka's coffers was all but inevitable, some analysts say policies before Covid-19 exacerbated the problems, leaving the country in a vulnerable financial position.

Sri Lanka is currently facing its worst economic crisis since independence in 1948 and is on the brink of its first debt default. The island-nation has been asking friendly nations including India and China for credit lines, food and energy, even as Sri Lanka's central is has been left with dwindling foreign exchange reserves.

Sri Lanka's foreign reserves were at $1.93 billion at the end of March. The island-nation's reserves have slumped more than two-thirds in the past two years, as tax cuts and the Covid-19 pandemic badly hurt its tourism-dependent economy and exposed the government's debt-fuelled spending.

The country has foreign debt payments of around $4 billion due this year, including a $1 billion international sovereign bond maturing in July. However, Sri Lanka's central bank stated it had become "challenging and impossible" to repay external debt.

Meanwhile, the Asian Development Bank has projected the GDP growth rate for the year 2022 to be 2.4 per cent.

NEPAL

India's neighbour in the East is also facing economic turmoil. Like Sri Lanka, Nepal's foreign reserves have been hit by a slump in tourism in Asia during the pandemic.

"Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB, the central bank) feels the country's foreign exchange reserves are under pressure and something must be done to restrict the import of non-essential goods, without affecting the supply of essential goods," NRB deputy spokesperson Narayan Prasad Pokharel has told Reuters.

As a result, Nepal is tightening imports of cars, gold and cosmetics. The government has also suspended the central bank governor and named his deputy the interim chief.

The Himalayan country is heavily dependent on tourism and the export of limited commodities for the foreign exchange reserves that the country needs to meet its import expenditure. The foreign exchange reserves have been declining since July 2021 soon after a political crisis in the country led to the fall of the KP Sharma Oli government. Imports have been surging ever since while the inflow of remittances and earnings from tourism and exports has declined.

Nepal's forex reserves declined from $11.75 billion in mid-July 2021 to $9.75 billion in February this year. This is just enough to pay import bills for less than seven months -- the threshold set as a benchmark by the country's central bank.

The country's import bill rose 38.6 per cent to $10.8 billion in the first eight months of the financial year that started in mid-July. This forced the government to dip into foreign currency reserves amid sluggish export earnings.

Soaring global prices of commodities such as crude and edible oil are adding to the pressure on the picturesque Himalayan country's foreign currency reserves amid a decline in remittances and tourist earnings.

The reserves are sufficient to support imports for a little more than six months for the country.

CHINA

While China has still managed to keep a check on its economy during the pandemic, another Covid-19 outbreak is keeping the country on the edge. Currently, a total of 23 Chinese cities have implemented either full or partial lockdowns, which collectively are home to an estimated 193 million people and contribute to 22% of China's GDP.

The European Union Chamber of Commerce in China has said that the current strategy is resulting in growing difficulties in transporting goods across provinces and through ports, harming factory output. This would likely impact China's ability to export, which could eventually stoke inflation.

WHAT ABOUT INDIA?
India, which reported a 17-month high inflation rate in March, has witnessed the steepest weekly fall ever in its forex reserves, according to Reserve Bank of India (RBI) data released on April 8. India's forex reserves slid by $11.173 billion to $606.475 billion as the currency came under pressure due to geopolitical developments, according to RBI.

The previous worst weekly fall was of $9.6 billion for the week ended on March 11.
However, in a silver lining, RBI governor Shaktikanta Das has stated that the economic activity was barely above pre-pandemic levels but continues to steadily recover.

https://www.indiatoday.in/business/story/business-story-economic-crisis-india-neighbours-pakistan-sri-lanka-nepal-china-covid-1937979-2022-04-16
 
Nepal is going to be the new Sri Lanka by the time the year is out - my prediction.

They are exhibiting the same symptoms.
 
All because Chinese banks are now focussing on their balance sheet in a faltering economy & refusing to bail out further debt ridden countries. This was the debt trap everybody was warning these countries about but the politicians in SL, Nepal, Pakistan turned a blind eye towards the cost of Chinese benevolence. SL is already in the quagmire, Nepal is heading that way soon, hope Pakistan doesnt go that way.
 
Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman, who is in the United States, assured help to SriLanka.
India’s assistance was also appreciated by the IMF


Finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman, who is in the United States, on Monday assured help to Sri Lanka, which is facing one of its worst-ever financial crises. India will “try to extend all possible cooperation” to the neighbouring country, a tweet by the ministry of finance read as Sitharaman met her counterpart Ali Sabry.

India’s assistance was also appreciated by the IMF ( International Monetary Fund) chief Kristalina Georgieva as she met the union finance minister, adding that the global institution will continue to engage with Sri Lanka, news agency PTI reported.

India has extended financial assistance worth more than $1.5 billion, including two lines of credit for purchasing fuel, food and medicines, to help the neighbouring nation tackle the current challenges.

Sri Lanka has also been witnessing one of the biggest unrests in history amid mounting public anger as people face shortage of fuel and other essentials and blackouts.

On Monday, president Gotabaya Rajapaksa appointed a new cabinet to send out a message of political stability. He also admitted that the public anger - amid the shortage of essentials - was justified.

The country has sought rapid assistance from the IMF, an aide to the country's finance minister tweeted on Tuesday. “Negotiations with IMF started on a positive note today. They see the recent steps taken to increase the interest rates and calling for RfP’s for the appointment of Intl. Financial/Legal Advisors as good first steps towards a possible restructuring Programme,” Shamir Zavahir said.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/as-sitharaman-assures-support-to-sri-lanka-imf-praises-india-s-help-amid-crisis-101650347084446.html
 
Doctors across Sri Lanka say hospitals are running out of medicines and essential supplies as the country's economic crisis worsens. They fear a health catastrophe if international help doesn't arrive soon.

"Day by day things are running out. If we get to the point where it's zero, then I don't know what will happen," says Dr Gnanasekaram anxiously.

As secretary of Sri Lanka's Association of Medical Specialists, the surgeon has been busy compiling lists of which medicines are running low at hospitals in the capital Colombo.

"We are short of medical drugs, anaesthetic drugs, implants, suture materials. We are nearly exhausting the stock.

"Healthcare services are going to collapse unless there's immediate relief," he says.

I meet Dr Gnanasekaram between consultations - he says he's hoping this interview will encourage international donors to come forward.

If supplies aren't replenished soon, the doctor warns of dire consequences.

"If that happens there may be a situation where we won't be able to save patients' lives."

Sri Lanka is in the midst of its worst economic crisis in history. The country imports around 85% of its medical supplies. But with foreign currency reserves running low, essential drugs are now difficult to obtain.

At his office in Sri Lanka's largest children's hospital, Lady Ridgeway, medical director Dr Wijesuriya shows me a piece of paper with a list of essential drugs on it.

Next to the name of the medicine, there's a column showing availability.

Some like atracurium - used in anaesthetics - have only two months of stock left. But as I scan the list further, other drugs are in even shorter supply.

There's only two weeks left of the painkiller fentanyl, while three different types of antibiotics are already "out of stock".

For now Dr Wijesuriya says he's managing these shortages with substitutions. He remains optimistic that the government will find a way to get him what is needed for his patients.

Frontline doctors are far less upbeat. Many say they've been told by the government they can't speak openly to the media about the situation, with only union representatives and hospital directors authorised to do so.

In a statement Sri Lanka's government initially denied medicines were running out, even as doctors reported problems.

A day later the Department of Government Information issued a correction, admitting there is a shortage of some drugs and equipment.

Documents seen by the BBC, interviews with medical unions and testimony from frontline doctors reveal that hospitals across the nation are in desperate need of a range of life-saving drugs and equipment.

Medical staff have told the BBC the crunch in supplies has forced them to suspend non-essential operations, and reuse or ration some equipment.

Dr Nishan (not his real name) works at a cancer hospital in the Eastern province.

"In two weeks' time we may have to stop most surgeries and only do emergencies," he told me as he reeled off a list of essentials like IV fluids, paracetamol, and antibiotics that his team are struggling to get hold of.

"There may be a time when we have to even stop treating cancer patients," he warned.

Dr Nishan is from an area hit hard by the country's civil war. Working as a doctor in conflict has its many challenges, but this economic crisis comes with many others.

"During the war we had limitations, but we could still get things from the ministry in Colombo," he said.

"But now even the health ministry doesn't have supplies. During wartime we were not so frustrated and desperate as we are now."

Sri Lanka runs a free national healthcare system, which millions of people on the island rely on.

Kasun (not his real name), who works at a hospital in the Southern province, said it's only a matter of days before drugs run out unless supplies come in.

"We are being told to use what we have sparingly, but there's no real solution. I feel helpless."

The largest doctor's union on the island, the Government Medical Officers' Association (GMOA), has blamed the crisis on poor financial and economic management and is calling on people from overseas to donate supplies.

It has published an extensive list of items which are desperately needed, which includes antibiotics, paracetamol, blood pressure medicine and anti-depressants.

WhatsApp groups of Sri Lankan doctors around the world are busily trying to source drugs, as the diaspora pitches in to help at this desperate time.

Dr Saman Kumara, president of the Perinatal Society of Sri Lanka, recorded a desperate video message last week, pleading for ET tubes to help newborn babies breathe.

"We have almost used all the stocks and no ET tubes will be available in a few weeks," he said. Dr Kumara said he had instructed staff to clean and sterilise tubes in case they needed to be reused.

After his message went out, doctors around the world sprang into action to help. Within 24 hours, he said he was donated an "adequate amount" of ET tubes for his hospital.

But he says other shortages remain, and is working with the Save A Baby charity to help co-ordinate efforts.

Dr Anver Hamdani, who was recently appointed by the Sri Lankan health ministry to co-ordinate efforts to keep healthcare services running, told the BBC he and his colleagues are working to overcome the shortages.

He's hoping pledges from overseas governments including a credit line from India, the main supplier of Sri Lanka's medicines, plus donations which are coming in, will prevent the looming crisis.

"We have to admit this is a challenging period - there is a reasonable amount of shortage of certain things.

"It is not yet under control, it in the process of being controlled," he said conceding that once the short term supply problem was fixed, a sustainable financing solution will still need to be found.

Sri Lanka's medical crisis is compounded by the added pressure staff themselves are having to face.

Kasun says workers at his hospital have been told overtime payments will be cut as budgets are strained.

Like millions across the country doctors are struggling to obtain the basics. Many say they are queuing for hours to get fuel for their cars to get to hospital.

"It's becoming very difficult to live, salaries aren't going up but the cost of living has skyrocketed," he said.

As tens of thousands have taken to the streets to protest at rising food and fuel prices, doctors, nurses and medical students have joined the demonstrations.

Back at his office Dr Gnanaksekaran pleaded to the world for help.

"We need supplies to come in whatever form, whether it's another country's government, or an individual donation.

"As professionals we are apolitical, but we are concerned about our patients.

"We just want to be able to treat them - we don't want them to die."

BBC
 
I didn't realize it was this bad for Sri Lanka. I hope things will get better for them.
 
All because Chinese banks are now focussing on their balance sheet in a faltering economy & refusing to bail out further debt ridden countries. This was the debt trap everybody was warning these countries about but the politicians in SL, Nepal, Pakistan turned a blind eye towards the cost of Chinese benevolence. SL is already in the quagmire, Nepal is heading that way soon, hope Pakistan doesnt go that way.

This is what separates Chinese from West. Western nations are not too particular about the money lent to poor nations. Chinese do not play any games when it comes to Financial stuff.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Using lethal force against unarmed protestors is unconscionable. Inexcusable. The first responsibility of the police is to protect lives of people. Such a shameful instance of brutality.</p>— Kumar Sangakkara (@KumarSanga2) <a href="https://twitter.com/KumarSanga2/status/1516488508390653955?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 19, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
A defiant Sri Lankan Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa on Saturday dismissed calls to form an interim government to tackle the unprecedented economic crisis in the debt-ridden island nation, saying he would anyway head any such dispensation if it is required.

Thousands of demonstrators have hit the streets since April 9, as the government ran out of money for vital imports; prices of essential commodities have skyrocketed and there are acute shortages in fuel, medicines and electricity supply.

Speaking to radio station 'Neth FM', the prime minister said: "What use of interim governments when people with varying policies can't see eye to eye? There has to be accord which is not possible. If there is a need for an interim government it should happen only under my leadership."

Anti-government protesters in Sri Lanka are demanding the resignation of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his elder brother Prime Minister Mahinda as they blame the government policies for the worst forex crisis.

Commenting on the economic crisis, Rajapaksa, 77, said, "People need to show patience to face it (the economic crisis). They can keep on protesting if they don't want to have talks."

Speaking on the protestors who are currently occupying Galle Face, the Prime Minister said that the protestors simply continue to occupy the place without coming forward for discussions.

"They should speak and discuss with the Government officials," he said.

He added that if the protestors are willing, the doors of Temple Trees (the official residence of the prime minister) are open for them to come in at anytime and discuss with officials.

Last week, the ruling dispensation reached out to the Opposition parties and protesters for talks, but all efforts were rebuffed as the agitators said they want the government to resign.

Prime minister Rajapaksa said he wasn't aware personally of anyone calling for his stepping down.

"Even if there are demands for my resignation, it would not be from the majority, it will be from a minority group who wouldn't know the political history of the country," he asserted.

A group of over 40 Parliamentarians from the ruling coalition have declared independence and have demanded the formation of an interim government comprising all political parties to tackle the economic crisis.

Meanwhile, India has agreed to extend an additional USD 500 million credit line to help Sri Lanka import fuel.

India has already agreed to defer USD 1.5 billion in import payments that Sri Lanka needs to make to the Asian Clearing Union.

Sri Lanka needs at least USD 4 billion to tide over its mounting economic woes, and talks with international institutions such as the World Bank as well as countries like China and Japan for financial assistance have been going on.

Last week, the Sri Lankan government said it would temporarily default on USD 35.5 billion in foreign debt as the pandemic and the war in Ukraine made it impossible to make payments to overseas creditors.

Sri Lanka has been witnessing mass anti-government protests in recent weeks as it suffers food shortages, soaring fuel prices and major power cuts due to the unprecedented financial crisis.

https://www.business-standard.com/a...orming-interim-government-122042300567_1.html
 
Sri Lanka has sharply increased prices of commonly used medication, the second such rise in six weeks, as it struggles to deal with an economic crisis.

Antibiotics, certain painkillers and medication for heart conditions are among those hit by a 40% mark-up.

Sri Lankans have had to take short courses of medicines or look overseas for supplies.

The government says it has no other option than to increase the cost of pharmaceutical products.

It follows measures to help slow the depletion of foreign exchange reserves amid a crippling financial crisis.

Among the measures were restrictions or bans on the import of some essential goods, including foods and medicines.
"This is not something that government is doing willingly," Nalaka Godahewa, Sri Lanka's minister for mass media told the BBC.

He said the devaluation of the rupee and the fact that most medicine is imported by the private sector meant the government had no choice, otherwise there would be a serious shortage.

Health professionals are worried that the scarcity of medicine is forcing people to buy less than the prescribed limit.
"The situation is bad. Sometimes antibiotics are prescribed for five days.

Now my customers are saying give me the antibiotics only for two or three days. How will it work?" Ruchira Hewawasam, who runs a pharmacy in Colombo, said.

Some fear that even for those willing and able to pay higher prices, some medication is in short supply.

Velupillai Wigneswaran who lives in the central Ratnapura district, has been trying to find prescription tablets for his sister, who suffers from a serious neurological disorder, for the past year.

"We tried several pharmacies but the medicines are not available. Doctors have advised us not to take different medicine. We are trying to get the tablets from India through our friends," he said.

Without the medicine, Mr Wigneswaran said his sister was suffering and he was not sure what will happen to her health.

"The crisis we are facing in the pharmaceutical sector is unprecedented. The sharp increase in medicine prices will take its toll," Azam Jaward, Vice President of Sri Lanka Chamber of Pharmaceutical Industry told the BBC.

Antibiotics for paediatrics, life-saving anti-biotics, steroids are among the medicines are difficult to obtain.

This comes against the backdrop of explosive public anger at the rising prices of other essential items such as cooking gas, milk powder and fuel.

Thousands of people have been protesting against the worsening shortage and calling for the government to resign.

India has offered to supply medicines as part of a loan programme. But that process has been slowed down due to bureaucratic hurdles.

The government has approached international agencies like the World Bank to help buy essential items like medicines.

"They have already told us something like $600 million will be coming forth and when that comes we should be able to bring some of these prices down," Mr Godahewa said.


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-61285290
 
Colombo: Sri Lanka President Gotabaya Rajapaksa today declared a state of emergency giving security forces sweeping powers for the second time in five weeks to deal with escalating anti-government protests. A spokesman for the President said he invoked the tough laws to "ensure public order" after trade unions staged a nationwide strike Friday demanding his resignation over a worsening economic crisis.

Earlier today, the police again fired tear gas and water cannon at students trying to storm Sri Lanka's parliament as the country was brought to a halt by a trade union strike demanding the government step down.

Months of blackouts and acute shortages of food, fuel and pharmaceuticals have caused widespread suffering across the island nation of 22 million people.

Public anger has sparked sustained protests demanding the government's resignation over its mismanagement of the crisis, Sri Lanka's worst since independence in 1948.

Thousands of student protesters had been camped on the road leading to the legislature, which is on a man-made island on a lake in the capital Colombo, since Thursday.

Officers fired a barrage of tear gas followed by water cannon from two trucks, but the crowd quickly reassembled behind police barricades set up to block access to the parliament.

It was the second time police tried to disperse the crowd with tear gas, after an earlier unsuccessful attempt on Thursday afternoon.

Millions of workers stayed off the job today in a strike organised by the country's trade union movement, with all but one scheduled train service cancelled. Privately owned buses were off the roads while industrial workers demonstrated outside their factories and black flags were hung across the country in an expression of anger against the government.

"We can pinpoint the policy blunders of the President that led to this very sorry state of our economy," said trade union leader Ravi Kumudesh. "He must go."

Private buses, which account for two-thirds of the country's fleet, were also off the road, Private Bus Operators Association chairman Gemunu Wijeratne said. "We are not providing services today, but if groups of people want to join the anti-government protests within a radius of 20 kilometres, we will give our buses free of charge," Mr Wijeratne told reporters in Colombo.

Mr Rajapaksa has insisted he will not step down despite escalating demonstrations across the island, including a protest that has been camped outside his seafront office for nearly a month.

Sri Lanka's economic crisis took hold after the coronavirus pandemic hammered income from tourism and remittances.

Unable to pay for fuel imports, utilities have imposed daily blackouts to ration electricity, while long lines of people snake around service stations for petrol and kerosene. Hospitals are short of vital medicines and the government has appealed to citizens abroad for donations.

Last month Sri Lanka announced it was defaulting on its $51 billion foreign debt, and finance minister Ali Sabry warned this week that the country will have to endure its unprecedented economic hardships for at least two more years.

NDTV
 
Sri Lanka could run out of fuel and food in the next month, according to the former energy minister.

Udaya Gammanpila was sacked earlier this year for criticising government policy that has taken the country to the brink of bankruptcy.

The former energy minister told Sky News the economic crisis in his country is reaching a tipping point that could lead to the collapse of agriculture, medical services and industrial production, leading to "anarchy".

He issued the warning before Sri Lanka's President Gotabaya Rajapaksa declared a state of emergency across the country on Friday evening effective from midnight.

It comes amid widespread protests calling for the resignation of Mr Rajapaksa and his brother Mahinda, who is prime minister, as Sri Lanka faces its worst economic crisis in recent memory.

The government notice said the state of emergency has been declared in the interests of public security.

It is the second time in five weeks the president has declared a state of emergency, which gives him sweeping powers and allows him to control protests.

The latest move comes as a general strike across Sri Lanka has brought business and transport in the capital Colombo to a halt, and saw police use water cannon and tear gas against demonstrators.

Gotabaya and Mahinda Rajapaksa are accused of nepotism, and blamed by many for a crisis that has seen Sri Lanka's usable foreign currency reserves dwindle to less than $50m (£40m), leaving it reliant on the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, and India and China, for credit required to import fuel, food and cooking gas.

The Rajapaksa brothers have faced protests for more than a month amid fuel shortages, soaring medicine and food prices, and rolling blackouts imposed to ration power supplies.

Earlier this week the finance minister admitted the country has barely enough money to buy a single tanker load of fuel, leaving it almost entirely reliant on a credit line from India for petrol, diesel and kerosene.

Sri Lanka is in negotiations with the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, and with its major creditors India and China.

Mr Gammanpila, who was sacked in March for speaking out against government monetary policy, said the consequences of the economic crisis could be dire.

"Basically, Sri Lanka right now has no foreign currency reserves whatsoever," he said.

"There is a risk of fuel shortages in the near future because in the last three months we have had the benefit of India's credit line, which supplied Sri Lanka with $500m worth of petroleum products

"That's now being fully utilised, so we have a risk of running out of all kinds of fuel. It's like a man without blood, the body dies. The situation is terrible."

He also warned of food shortages, caused in part by a disastrous decision to ban chemical fertiliser imports last year. Relying only on organic products saw crop yields plummet, leaving an abundant island no longer self-sufficient in fruit and vegetables, and causing dramatic price rises for staples including rice.

"In the near future Sri Lanka will have to import vegetables, fruits and grains such as rice and maize for consumption. But because of the foreign currency shortage, we are not in a position to do that right now. In the coming months, definitely, there will be a food shortage."

Following an emergency cabinet meeting it was reported that the president has asked his brother to resign as prime minister.

SKY
 
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